Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Meeting the essential requirements for healthy adolescent development in a transforming world
- 2 Adapting educational systems to young adolescents and new conditions
- 3 The impact of school reform for the middle grades: A longitudinal study of a network engaged in Turning Points–based comprehensive school transformation
- 4 Schooling for the middle years: Developments in Europe
- 5 The role of the school in comprehensive health promotion
- 6 Education for healthy futures: Health promotion and life skills training
- 7 HUMBIO: Stanford University's human biology curriculum for the middle grades
- 8 Education for living in pluriethnic societies
- 9 The economics of education and training in the face of changing production and employment structures
- 10 School-to-work processes in the United States
- 11 Finding common ground: Implications for policies in Europe and the United States
- Name index
- Subject index
3 - The impact of school reform for the middle grades: A longitudinal study of a network engaged in Turning Points–based comprehensive school transformation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Meeting the essential requirements for healthy adolescent development in a transforming world
- 2 Adapting educational systems to young adolescents and new conditions
- 3 The impact of school reform for the middle grades: A longitudinal study of a network engaged in Turning Points–based comprehensive school transformation
- 4 Schooling for the middle years: Developments in Europe
- 5 The role of the school in comprehensive health promotion
- 6 Education for healthy futures: Health promotion and life skills training
- 7 HUMBIO: Stanford University's human biology curriculum for the middle grades
- 8 Education for living in pluriethnic societies
- 9 The economics of education and training in the face of changing production and employment structures
- 10 School-to-work processes in the United States
- 11 Finding common ground: Implications for policies in Europe and the United States
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
Educational policymakers and practitioners are today under a constant barrage of calls for reform to produce better student performance. Efforts to improve schooling in the United States are not new, and have waxed and waned over the decades in their urgency and level of public support. The impetus for reform emerged with renewed vigor in the last two decades, fueled by reports such as A Nation at Risk (National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983) and, more recently, by the national “Goals 2000” legislation. Driving current reform efforts are concerns about the changing, more competitive world economy and dramatic increases in the number of low-income and racial and ethnic minority children in schools, children whom American schools have too often failed to educate well (Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development, 1989; Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy, 1986; William T. Grant Foundation, 1988). A consensus has emerged that there can be little hope of addressing the increasing levels of social inequity and social problems that confront us daily unless all students receive the quality education necessary for participation, opportunity, and success in today' world.
Into this mix of calls for reform and shifts in the social context in which schools must operate have come a wide array of reform recommendations. Some are linked to the belief that market forces can improve schools, emphasizing such strategies as the privatization of school management and voucher plans.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Preparing Adolescents for the Twenty-First CenturyChallenges Facing Europe and the United States, pp. 38 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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